Organizations
How companies, institutions, and movements embody the sixteen values.
Costco
Membership as a trust contract
Costco built the second-largest retailer in the world on a business model whose logic depends entirely on sustained customer trust. The membership fee is paid before any purchase; the customer is betting that the value of what Costco sells will justify the annual cost. This requires Costco to honor that trust on every purchase and to decline business that would compromise it. The policy of capping markup at 15 percent, the treatment of employees as a source of competitive advantage rather than a cost to minimize, and the consistent refusal to introduce premium-tier memberships at the standard customer's expense all reflect a genuine commitment to the reliability the membership model demands.
Costco
Membership as a trust contract
Costco built the second-largest retailer in the world on a business model whose logic depends entirely on sustained customer trust. The membership fee is paid before any purchase; the customer is betting that the value of what Costco sells will justify the annual cost. This requires Costco to honor that trust on every purchase and to decline business that would compromise it. The policy of capping markup at 15 percent, the treatment of employees as a source of competitive advantage rather than a cost to minimize, and the consistent refusal to introduce premium-tier memberships at the standard customer's expense all reflect a genuine commitment to the reliability the membership model demands.
Employee wages and benefits that are the highest in mass-market retail. A return policy so generous it has no effective time limit. Product quality that consistently outperforms comparable items from competing retailers. A trust-oriented business model that has compounded value for both customers and shareholders across 40 years.
A format requiring large vehicle access and a significant initial membership investment that makes the trust relationship structurally unavailable to the households that would benefit most from it. Product sourcing at the scale required to maintain both the markup cap and the quality standard, creating supplier relationships that the company's ethical commitments have not always resolved well.
Jim Sinegal's decision not to raise the price of a Costco hot dog and soda from $1.50 - a price maintained since 1985 - as an explicit statement that certain trust commitments are not subject to renegotiation regardless of inflationary conditions.
USAA
Serving those who serve
USAA was founded by 25 Army officers who could not get automobile insurance because commercial insurers considered military personnel too high-risk, so they decided to insure each other. The mutual company structure, serving exclusively active and retired military members and their families, created an institution whose entire business model depends on the trust relationship between the organization and a community defined by its own culture of commitment and reliability. USAA consistently ranks highest in customer satisfaction among all financial services providers in the United States, not because of superior technology but because it has not deviated from the founding premise that its members deserve the same reliability they practice in their profession.
USAA
Serving those who serve
USAA was founded by 25 Army officers who could not get automobile insurance because commercial insurers considered military personnel too high-risk, so they decided to insure each other. The mutual company structure, serving exclusively active and retired military members and their families, created an institution whose entire business model depends on the trust relationship between the organization and a community defined by its own culture of commitment and reliability. USAA consistently ranks highest in customer satisfaction among all financial services providers in the United States, not because of superior technology but because it has not deviated from the founding premise that its members deserve the same reliability they practice in their profession.
Claims service that consistently outperforms commercial competitors. Financial products designed for the specific circumstances of military life - deployment, frequent relocation, irregular income - that commercial institutions do not design for. A membership model treating eligibility itself as a form of recognition of service.
The challenge of maintaining personalized service quality as the membership base expanded from 25 officers to 13 million members. The inherent selectivity of an institution that serves one of the most trusted demographic groups in America, leaving the populations who most need trustworthy financial institutions without access to the model.
The founding meeting in San Antonio in 1922, when 25 officers concluded that the only way to get reliable insurance was to insure each other - creating an institution that a century later would be the most trusted name in military financial services.